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Wythe Confectionary renovation in Brooklyn completed

Wythe Confectionary renovation in Brooklyn completed


By By BD+C Staff | August 31, 2011
The Wythe Confectionary renovation retains architectural heritage while reflecting a modern urban lifestyle.

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The New York office Perkins Eastman joins developer/builder Caro Enterprises in celebrating the completion ofĀ the unique 69-unit Wythe Confectionery apartments at 390 Wythe Avenue in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. The conversion has restored the buildingā€™s original beauty, with plentiful exposed brick, original wooden beams, and wooden ceilings.

Principal in Charge Shawn Basler AIA says of the buildingā€™s transformation, ā€œIt has been very gratifying to be part of the effort to retain the architectural heritage in such a vibrant and diverse neighborhood.ā€

Originally built to house the Matchett Candy factory at the turn of the 19th century, the pine framed brick building was one of the few candy factories in Williamsburg. The building is a testament to the areaā€™s flourishing industrial past, and as a physical example of the commitment to the preservation of the neighborhood character and our vital connections to its heritage. As a piece of Brooklyn history, Perkins Eastman and the developer went to great lengths to preserve and restore original architectural features, while reclaiming and reusing materials when possible in the studio, one- and two-bedroom loft apartments.

The team retained architectural features like the brick barrel-hinge corner, a corbelled brick cornice, arched windows, massively scaled ground floor openings, and decorative brickwork punctuated with unique decorative iron ties across the facade. Brick and timber columns have once again been exposed and highlighted, cast iron column straps and capitals have been brought back to life, and the original heavy-timbered plank flooring was restored and retained as ceilings--all combined with modern fixtures and finishes throughout. Other native materials, including extra timbers and slate flooring that were not used during the restoration, were reclaimed for reuse in the public and shared spaces of the building, designed by Visconti Architecture.

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